There has also been a fair bit of work done on convict era prisons in
Australia including the following:
Bosworth, M., & Jean, Amanda 1999. Interpreting confinement in
north-western Australia. Historic Environment, 14: 25-32.
Casella, E. C. 2001c. To Watch or Restrain - Female Convict Prisons in
19th-Century Tasmania. International Journal of Historical Archaeology, 5:
45-72.
Casella, E. C. 2009a. On the Enigma of Incarceration: Philosophical
Approaches to Confinement in the Modern Era. In: BEISAW, A. M. & GIBB, J.
G. (eds.) The Archaeology of Institutional Life. Tuscaloosa: University of
Alabama. 17-32.
Casella, E. C. 2009b. Written on the Walls: Inmate Graffiti within Places
of Confinement. In: BEISAW, A. M. & GIBB, J. B. (eds.) The Archaeology of
Institutional Life. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press. 172-186.
Dewar, M., & Frederickson, Clayton 2003. Prison Heritage, Public History
and Archaeology at Fannie Bay Gaol, Northern Australia. International
Journal of Heritage Studies, 9: 45-63.
Gibbs, M. 2001. The Archaeology of the Convict System in Western Australia.
Australasian Historical Archaeology, 19: 60-72.
Kerr, J. S. 1984. Design for Convicts. Sydney: Library of Australian
History.
Winter, S. 2011. A Preliminary Report on Archaeological Investigations at
Two Western Australian Regional Convict Depots. Australian Archaeology, 73:
65-68.
Additionally there has been a lot of consultancy and post-grad work done at
the two world heritage sites of Fremantle Prison and Port Arthur, but so
far most of it is unpublished.
Hope this helps
Sean Winter
PhD Candidate in Archaeology
University of Western Australia
Ph: (+61) 08 6488 4298
M: 0437 461 561
E: [log in to unmask]
W1:
http://www.sscs.arts.uwa.edu.au/research/postgrad-research-profiles?profile/1/id/2714
W2: http://uwa.academia.edu/SeanWinter/About
M405
35 Stirling Highway
Crawley
WA 6009
On Tue, Oct 16, 2012 at 6:30 PM, geoff carver <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> For comparative material I do know of at least one prison from London,
> England that was excavated, and maybe you could look into some of the work
> done at concentration camps or the basement of the Gestapo headquarters in
> Berlin (or is that too wide of the mark? Guess you won't know unless you
> check it out).
>
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